Eric Rozenman
The Washington Post Versus Itself on Terrorism
In numerous articles about the seizure of more than 1,000 children and adults – of whom more than 300 died in Beslan, Russia last week – the Washington Post repeatedly used the words terror and terrorist. This contrasted with its front-page news story September 1 on the bus bombings in Be'ersheva, Israel.
A Hole in the Story
“One Land, Two People,” and Dozens of Errors
WASHINGTON POST-WATCH: A Tale of Two Papers
WASHINGTON POST-WATCH: Molly Moore Encourages Empathy For Palestinain Terrorists
WASHINGTON POST-WATCH: Moore Omissions
CAMERA has charged that Washington Post coverage of Arab-Israeli news is notable for what's omitted rather than what's reported. A page one story in the July 1 Post illustrates the problem.
WASHINGTON POST-WATCH: Moore of the Same
WASHINGTON POST-WATCH: Well Balanced, All Things Considered
Editing the President
When is a presidential warning about Iran's nuclear threat to destroy Israel not news? When is the chief executive's reiteration of American criticism of Palestinian Arab leadership and support for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's Gaza Strip withdrawal proposal similarly not newsworthy? When The Washington Post covers a speech by George W. Bush to the National Newspaper Association.